A Historical Analysis of Photography and Anthropology

Document Type : Research Paper

Author

Assistant Professor, Department of Handicraft, Faculty of Art, University of Sistan and Baluchestan, Zahedan, Iran

Abstract

Photography, since its invention in the mid-nineteenth century, has been considered and used in many modern scientific disciplines and has been able to develop and advance various scientific goals. Anthropologists and ethnographers used photographs to discover, capture, and study various societies, and photography became virtually an integral part of the study and research, and much later in the third decade of the twentieth century,various branches of social photography (such as social documentary photography) arose from these surveying, geographical, ethnographic, and anthropological photographs. The question, however,is to what extent did anthropological photography adhere to the inherent characteristics of this emerging medium (objective and direct recording)?The answer to this question seems important because we look at some of the results of the purposeful use of such photographs in the fields of Orientalism and colonialism in Western societies. For this purpose, and to achieve a more accurate answer,in the present study,we will define and study anthropological, humanistic and ethnographic photographs using the method of historical analysis, and critically analyze it in the context of social studies of history.We conclude that the different interpretations of the photographs are generally and largely the result of the obvious interests pursued by Western anthropologists.

Keywords


El Guindi, F. (1998). Visual Anthropology. In book: Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology. Edited by H. Russell Bernard and Clarence C. Gravlee. Published by Rowman & Littlefield, Maryland
Frizot, M. (1998). The New History of Photography. Konemann UK Ltd. United Kingdom.
Morton, C. (2018). Photography, Anthropology of. In book: The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology. Edited by Hilary Callan. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Morton, C., Edwards, E. (2009). Photography, Anthropology and History. Ashgate Publishing limited. England;
Pinney, Christopher (2011). Photography and Anthropology. Reaktion Books Ltd. London;
Riviera, D. (2010). Picture This: A Review of Doing Visual Ethnography: Images, Media and Research by Sarah Pink. In: The Qualitative Report. Vol. 15 No. 4. July; Nova Southeastern University, Florida;
Steichen, E. (1955). The Family of Man: The greatest photographic exhibition of all time- 503 pictures from 68 countries- created by Edward Steichen for The Museum of Modern Art. Museum of Modern Art, Maco Magazine Corporation. New York.
Sykes, C., L. (1999) August Sander and the task of the photographer. London, Ontario: The University of the Western Ontario.
Tagg, J. (1988). The Burden of Representation: Essays on Photographies and Histories. Palgrave MacMillan, New York;
Tagg, J. (2009). The Disciplinary of Frame. University of Minnesota Press, United States;
Thompson, K., K., Bordwell, D. (2002). Film History: An Introduction. McGraw-Hill Companies, New York.
 Turk, B., N. (2011). Some Thoughts on Ethnographic Field Work and Photography. In: Journal of Croatian studies, Vol. 23. Croatian Academy of America, United States;
Warren, L. (2006). Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Photography. Routledge Pub. New York; Wright, C. (2018). Photo-Ethnography. In The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology. Edited by Hilary Callan. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.